Given the keys to Texas A&Mβs football program in 2012, Kevin Sumlin inherited six first-round NFL draft picks. Thatβs not a typo. S-I-X. Not to mention a Heisman Trophy quarterback.
His first A&M team swept Alabama, Oklahoma and Auburn.
There was no break-in time necessary. The Aggies were power brokers from the day Sumlin arrived in College Station.
Who gets a job like that?
Before his Texas A&M assignment, Sumlinβs charge was to coach a Houston football operation coming off a two-year run of 18-8. The quarterback-on-duty was NFL-bound Case Keenam, who went on to throw for 16,958 yards and 141 touchdowns. Those are silly numbers. Thatβs 6,900 more yards and 74 more touchdowns than record-setting Nick Foles produced at Arizona.
The man who runs Arizonaβs football enterprise hasnβt been a turn-around specialist.
Sumlinβs last assistant coaching position was at Oklahoma. The Sooners went 12-2 and played in the Rose Bowl in Sumlinβs first season, 2003. Before that, at Purdue, the Boilermakers went 9-3 and finished No,. 15 in the final AP poll in Sumlinβs first coaching season at his alma mater.
This is a man whose coaching career has been blessed by the football gods. His first full-time assistant coaching gig was at Wyoming, 1991.
The Cowboys went 9-4, capping a 35-15 run across four seasons.
Why wouldnβt a football team want Kevin Sumlin, who always seemed to lead the league in good karma?
On Monday, 36 hours after Arizona was body-slammed 51-27 by Washington, Sumlin said βwe want to win now. β¦ everybody wants it right now, including me.β
Alas, Arizona football fans have learned that βright nowβ might mean two or three times a decade. And this doesnβt appear to be one of those βtwo or three times.β
In 20 seasons before moving to Tucson, Sumlin was part of programs that went 178-79. Arizona lost 125 games over the same period.
To his credit, Sumlin has not asked for patience. He has not been quoted as saying βthis thingβs going to take a few years.β Those pleas donβt work. You trust that heβs working on it and has surrounded himself with winners, not those from the good βol boy network, as Rich Rodriguez did.
βItβs our obligation to put the best product on the field now,β Sumlin said.
You and I both know Arizona is looking down the barrel of a 1-6 finish. Or, if things go well, a 6-6 season.
Victories over seriously flawed teams from UCLA, Texas Tech and Colorado were at the front-end of a soft opening.
Yet the Wildcats had to come from behind in the fourth quarter to beat all three struggling clubs.
Some coaches say that you canβt win regularly until you understand why you lose.
That philosophy mightβve worked 40 years ago when Larry Smith came to Arizona after enduring consecutive seasons of 2-9, 3-8 and 4-7 at Tulane.
That sort of learn-from-losing football education gets a coach fired today.
Among the many reasons Arizona likely considered hiring Navy coach Ken Niumatalolo were that he was coming off a five-year stretch of 45-20 β nine wins per season at a service academy β and had just one losing season over 10 years.
There are fewer turn-around specialists in college football because there are fewer athletic directors and presidents willing to absorb a few years of losing. Thatβs why Kansas hired someone like ex-LSU coach Les Miles instead of some turn-around guy youβve never heard of from Tulane.
As he did Monday, Sumlin often drops the name of UA strength and conditioning coach Brian Johnson in his media sessions.
Because Arizona has never been able to recruit consistently at the elite level, it is on someone like Johnson to make up the size and strength difference between Arizona and, say, USC.
When Sumlin spoke of the Trojans on Monday, he described the Trojansβ receivers as βbig guys that can run, which makes it easy on their quarterback.β
Other than Rob Gronkowski, when is the last time an opposing coach described an Arizona receiver as a βbig guy that can run?β Maybe Derek Hill in 1988.
Saturdayβs loss to Washington was Arizonaβs 18th game under Sumlin. He is 9-9. He has not had time to fill the roster with his own recruits; itβs entirely likely the only future NFL draft pick on Arizonaβs depth chart is sophomore tackle Donovan Laie.
Thatβs a glaring departure from Sumlinβs first two A&M seasons when eight players were drafted, four in the first round.
After 18 games at Texas A&M, Sumlin was 15-3. After 18 games at Houston he was 12-6. But football in Tucson isnβt like that. Itβs a grind, it demands patience, not promises.
The last half of Arizonaβs regular season could look a lot like 2016, when the Wildcats went 1-5 and were outscored by an average of 24.8 points per game.
If itβs anything better than that, Kevin Sumlin might for the first time be looked upon as a turn-around specialist.



